"I miss the early days before it became sort of a circus of attention, when it hadn't become this iconic thing. It was just really good writing and entertainment, and then it became something else that I still don't really get," he said.

When the second film was being made, photos surfaced of Kim Cattrall in a wedding dress, leading many to believe her character, Samantha Jones, would marry in the second film, something that never came to fruition. And it was scenes like the fake wedding that Noth said exemplified the fanaticism over the series-turned-movie.

"It actually got to the point with the movies that we had to make up plotlines so that people wouldn't know what we were doing and expose it and it be all over the papers. That was pretty crazy," he said. "You used to be able to go under the radar and have fun."